SueZee
Thanks for being patient and encouraging with this clueless newbie who previously knew nothing about arranging flowers. Now? Viola/presto/change-o!- “Why yes- I can do hand-ties, wiring and taping, tall-vasing, dish gardens, pave…” …What amazing things you can bring about in just 8 weeks. Thanks a million again.
I have attended altogether 3 more flower design classes since seeing you, and (now I have the unusual opportunity to “tell it like it is” to you- fancy that!)-over-all there was no comparison to you as a teacher, the content, the instruction and everything you provided- you are clearly “the winner” hands down in all categories. I don’t know if such a thing constitutes typical protocol or if association with you has left me with high flung notions that it is fitting students be treated like royalty in flower design classes henceforth- but my, you sure are generous! Case in point: for one class I attended, one of several items noted on the supplies list I was to bring was 2 floral wires. After Michael’s, being instructed to provide 2 wires for my self seemed trifling, for I only know the pull-out-all-the-stops, show-stopping Michael-style teaching where Michael provides and does EVERYthing for EVERYbody EVERY time.
Just learned last week from someone that flower design is offered at a local tech school here, and a textbook priced over $100 is required. And from what I have seen “out there” so far, typically students must provide ALL their own personal tools for a course in flower design such as yours. In my opinion, if students suggest you should have provided (and way more than what others’ classes seem to provide:. I can’t imagine a day will ever come when I’ll say to myself, “Gee, if only that Michael had done this or provided that…”
Michael has set up in the studio space which Michael has probably thoughtfully decorated to artistically coordinate with the evening’s lesson theme-to ensure his students are contentedly satisfied while they wait for Michael to walk around serving them flowers, greenery, supplies, tools, and containers. Why, Michael will cause it to rain pounds of on-site wires if he determines his students have need of them! And it wouldn’t be an unusual sight to find Michael hand-delivering those wires at each station like a waiter serving tables at a fine restaurant.
Please pass on my best and warmest regards to Richard after giving yourself another big pat on the back. Your school comes with one inherently fretful drawback: I’m now prone to experiencing bouts of School of Flower Design withdrawal every Mon and Wed evening- it’s quite awful!